John Thorndyke's Cases - related by Christopher Jervis - and edited by R. Austin Freeman by R. Austin (Richard Austin) Freeman
page 30 of 310 (09%)
page 30 of 310 (09%)
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place I found in Sundersley, and here I have lived for the last seven
years, liked and respected, I think, by my neighbours, who have little suspected that they were harbouring in their midst a convicted felon. "All this time I had neither seen nor heard anything of my four confederates, and I hoped and believed that they had passed completely out of my life. But they had not. Only a month ago I met them once more, to my sorrow, and from the day of that meeting all the peace and security of my quiet existence at Sundersley have vanished. Like evil spirits they have stolen into my life, changing my happiness into bitter misery, filling my days with dark forebodings and my nights with terror." Here Mr. Draper paused, and seemed to sink into a gloomy reverie. "Under what circumstances did you meet these men?" Thorndyke asked. "Ah!" exclaimed Draper, arousing with sudden excitement, "the circumstances were very singular and suspicious. I had gone over to Eastwich for the day to do some shopping. About eleven o'clock in the forenoon I was making some purchases in a shop when I noticed two men looking in the window, or rather pretending to do so, whilst they conversed earnestly. They were smartly dressed, in a horsy fashion, and looked like well-to-do farmers, as they might very naturally have been since it was market-day. But it seemed to me that their faces were familiar to me. I looked at them more attentively, and then it suddenly dawned upon me, most unpleasantly, that they resembled Leach and Jezzard. And yet they were not quite like. The resemblance was there, but the differences were greater than the lapse of time would account for. Moreover, the man who resembled Jezzard had a rather large mole on |
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